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Alternative Regulat ory Practices & Dispute Resolution

Explore alternative regulatory instruments, including workshops, advisory committees, and dispute resolution options like mediation and arbitration. Learn about negotiated rulemaking and conditions for effective mediation in the regulatory context.

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Alternative Regulat ory Practices & Dispute Resolution

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  1. Alternative Regulatory Practices & Dispute Resolution Rohan Samarajiva, LIRNE.NET & Delft University of Technology SAFIR Workshop on Legal Aspects of Regulation in South Asia, Dhaka, August 3-4, 2002

  2. Alternative regulatory instruments • Rule-making proceedings • Workshops • Advisory committees • Public hearings • Negotiated rulemaking • Dispute resolution • Mediation • Arbitration

  3. Alternative rulemaking • Workshops • Invite stakeholders to participate in workshops that will generate the information that will shape the formal process • Negotiated agenda that reflects stakeholder interests • Opens up the information-subsidy mechanism hitherto available primarily to the incumbent • Appropriate for cutting-edge issues • Can be combined with training • Allows for participation by local & foreign experts, paid for by NRA or by stakeholders

  4. Alternative rulemaking • Advisory committees • Good for subjects that require continuing attention, e.g., • Spectrum policy in telecom • Rights-of-way policy • Consumer protection • Problems • Staff capture • Keep separate from regulatory staff, if possible

  5. Alternative rulemaking • Public hearings • Structured environment for stakeholder consultation and education • Possible to have looser procedures for public hearings in some countries • Possible to be proactive • use of consultants • consultation documents • Relation between public hearing committee & NRA?

  6. Alternative rulemaking • Negotiated rulemaking • Parties jointly engaging with issues, rather than separately with NRA • Works only when number of parties is small • NRA to identify, invite to face-to-face negotiations • Parties with remote interest, limited to written comments

  7. Conditions for negotiated rulemaking • No party can win • Limited number of parties • Issues have crystallized • If no agreement, others decide • Potential for win-win • No fundamental values at stake • Multiple issues • One party does not control information

  8. Conditions for negotiated rulemaking • Ground rules established at start • Prevent adoption of adversarial roles • Periodic reminder: objective is not victory, but solution • Confidentiality rules • Harvard principles

  9. Harvard principles • Focus on interests, not initial positions • Seek options that allow mutual gain • Define objective criteria • Fisher & Ury (1981) Getting to yes

  10. Check list for alternative rulemaking • Rational choice of procedure • Issue initial notice • Ensure all parties represented • Generate necessary data • Obtain an advisory report • NRA should be ultimate decider • Reasoned decision by NRA • Not applicable to all countries • Prepared to sustain alternative procedures in US

  11. Dispute resolution: Arbitration • Third-party neutral • Appointed by NRA • If collective entity, may be appointed by parties • Can impose a solution • Parties bound by decision, generally

  12. Conventional arbitrator • Examines facts laid before her • Listens to disputants present their cases • Offers a solution • Generally binding • In some cases, may be modified • Similar to “trial”

  13. Conventional arbitration vs. trials • Outside conventional legal system and its delays • Toll road that allows faster movement than congested highway • Arbitrator selection different • May have expertise • Procedures may be less rigid • Appeals may be precluded

  14. Unconventional arbitration • Final-offer or “baseball” arbitration • Variation is to remove power of arbitrator to fashion a remedy • Has to pick one of the solutions proposed by the two parties • Corrects polarization incentives of conventional arbitration

  15. Assessment of arbitration • Fast-track trial, with some expertise thrown in • Adversarial, not cooperative • Neither variety addresses the cognitive and emotional dimensions of the conflict • They may get addressed if arbitrator is skilful • Not optimal for long-term cooperation

  16. Dispute resolution: Mediation • Assistance to resolve conflicts • Facilitation (guide consensus building process) • Training to prevent escalation of conflict • Coaching (same, but while negotiations are on) • Relevant forms of mediation • Fact finding (e.g., Mitchell Report)

  17. Mediation relevant to regulation • Forms of “binding” mediation • Advisory mediation • Interest-based arbitration • Mediation-arbitration • Same third-party neutral • Different arbitrator • Expert decision-makers on call

  18. Features of “binding” mediation • Less trial-like than arbitration • Linked to other mechanisms to yield results • while keeping door open for voluntary resolution • Third-party neutral’s role is more fluid

  19. Mediation in regulation • For NRA to be the effective third-party neutral, legitimacy needed • Perception that it’s fair • Independence • Special problems with incumbent • If NRA has quasi-judicial powers, important to insulate mediation function

  20. Mediation in regulation • Ensure mediation does not weaken formal decision-making powers • Conventional mediation gives ownership of conflict to parties • No guarantee of solution • NRA cannot accept impasse

  21. Mediation in regulation • NRA versus outsourcing? • Resources • Perceptions • Skilled mediation v. generic mediation

  22. Mediation in regulation • Need for training • Communication skills that are culture specific • Listening • Reading body language • Not ascribing motives • Not accusing • “I” messages v. “you” messages • Importance of framing & reframing

  23. Assessment of mediation • Regulation done right is what governance should be • Mediation-informed interactions are how life should be

  24. Additional resources • Fisher, R. & Ury, W. (1981) Getting to yes (Boston: Houghton Mifflin) • Mayer, B. (2000). The dynamics of conflict resolution: A practitioner’s guide (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass) • NRRI reports 87-12; 96-17; 96-24 • International Forum on Dispute Resolution in Telecommunications (IFDRT): Richard Hill & John Watkinson (eds.), “Telecommunications disputes: Specificities, problems, and solutions” (White Paper), (17 June 1999). At: http://www.icc-uk.com/rhill.html

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